dregin wrote: » Any recommendations for baby monitors?
Squidgy Black wrote: » Anyone suggest a decent place to park near Ulster Hall for a couple hours tomorrow morning?
mfceiling wrote: » Johnny Marr?
Zzippy wrote: » We got the angel monitor, which sets off an alarm if the baby stops breathing. Wife insisted on it as she knows someone who lost a baby to cot death. Now we have a toddler who thinks it's a sport to wedge himself into the corner of his cot, in just the right position so the monitor thinks he's not breathing. It's a very close-run thing that it hasn't met the wall with extreme velocity yet... On the plus side, I have a recently-discovered talent for sleeping through a crying baby waking up everyone else in the house.
Buer wrote: » If we needed another monitor for another kid I wouldn't get anything more than an audio monitor. Pretty much all you need is to know if they're crying. Anything else just means you're continually checking a monitor for no reason. We got a Motorola video monitor and I reckon it was mostly a waste of money. Can't fathom the monitors which have an app. Have friends that sit in the cinema checking their child sleeping every 2 minutes.
Zzippy wrote: » Now we have a toddler who thinks it's a sport to wedge himself into the corner of his cot, in just the right position so the monitor thinks he's not breathing.
molloyjh wrote: » Yeah, the app thing is too invasive. No point in even going to the cinema in that case. We use the video to decide whether we can ignore the crying or not. She's going through her sleep regression at the moment so at times when she's down she'll cry a little and go back to sleep after a minute or so. We know by looking at her whether we need to go up to her or not when she kicks off. It's been handy for that. And as she's our first it was useful when we moved her into her own room for the first time just to give us peace of mind (and without meaning to sound callous, by us I mean my wife).
Deleted User wrote: » Might be a dumb question; how do you know by looking at her?
pickarooney wrote: » I can't help feeling all this is bad habit forming. How far and for how long do you with tracking your child's every movement? It would be easy to convince yourself you need to monitor them for one reason or another all the way to adulthood. My son started secondary in September and it's kind of scary just how every movement is tracked. If the kid is a minute late for class both parents get a text, every mark, remark and punishment is immediately published on line, any comment from a teacher dissected as nauseam in parents' WhatsApp groups. I don't envy the children, it's suffocating.
pickarooney wrote: » My son started secondary in September and it's kind of scary just how every movement is tracked. If the kid is a minute late for class both parents get a text
Yeah_Right wrote: » All this talk of kids is making me really look forward to a drink tonight ðŸ˜
pickarooney wrote: » My kid just handed me one. It takes some training but eventually it pays off.
awec wrote: » If they are kicking and thrashing about they are properly annoyed. Sometimes they will lie totally still, as if they are sleeping, but just crying. These times you can generally ignore it cause they'll be fast asleep in a minute or two.
mfceiling wrote: » Blackadder on bbc4 tonight. I'd forgotten how funny it was.
molloyjh wrote: » Which one? Class show. Haven't seen it in ages.